WME Group sold its sports marketing division, 160over90, to French communications giant Publicis Groupe for $500 million, completing the talent agency's multi-year withdrawal from the branded-content side of sports. The deal closed last week, according to two people with knowledge of the transaction. WME bought 160over90 in 2018 for an undisclosed sum, then part of a broader push into sports marketing that included IMG's campus-marketing unit.
The sale leaves WME focused on athlete representation and event production. 160over90 employs 240 people across offices in Philadelphia, Charlottesville, and Portland, with clients including UCLA, the University of Michigan, and the NFL Players Association. The firm's college work—rebranding campaigns, NIL strategy, fan-engagement platforms—now sits inside Publicis Sport & Entertainment, the Paris-based holding company's $1.2 billion sports vertical. Publicis declined to comment on integration plans. WME representatives did not respond to requests for comment.
The math matters for two groups. First, college athletic directors sizing rebrand budgets: Publicis Sport runs sponsorship inventory for Formula E, advises World Rugby on commercial rights, and operates Prodigy Sports, a youth-tournament business with access to 18 million family email addresses. 160over90's campus clients now share a vendor with properties competing for the same sponsor dollars. Expect Publicis to cross-sell event hospitality, digital ad placements, and influencer access that 160over90 couldn't offer alone. One Power Five AD texted a colleague last Thursday asking if the deal changed their renewal terms. It doesn't—but the upsell call is coming.
Second, private-equity allocators tracking sports-marketing multiples: $500 million for a 240-person consultancy with multi-year contracts prices the business at roughly $2.1 million per employee, a premium to traditional agency math. Publicis is paying for locked-in college relationships and NIL infrastructure, not hourly consulting. The firm helped Michigan redesign its athletic mark in 2020, UCLA rebrand 26 sports in 2022, and built the NFLPA's player-marketing platform used by 930 active members. Those aren't project fees. They're retainer revenue with three-to-five-year terms, and Publicis can now layer sponsorship commissions, media buying, and talent booking on top.
WME's retreat follows a pattern. Endeavor, WME's parent company, sold its UFC stake for $1.7 billion in 2023, took WWE public in a $21.4 billion deal last year, and has been shedding non-core assets since the pandemic. The company still owns IMG, the sports-marketing giant with golf-tournament rights and tennis-player representation, but 160over90's college-branding work—slow, relationship-heavy, low-margin compared to tentpole events—didn't fit. Publicis, meanwhile, has spent $3.2 billion on sports and entertainment acquisitions since 2021, including Epsilon's sports-data unit and Sapient's fan-engagement platform.
Watch three things. First, whether Publicis moves 160over90's leadership: founder Dan Calpin and CEO Mike Mataya both stayed through the deal, but Publicis Sport CEO David Lampitt runs the vertical from London. Second, whether the NFLPA renews its player-marketing contract when the current term expires in early 2026—Publicis now controls the infrastructure 900-plus NFL players use to monetize their names, and the union has historically preferred independent vendors. Third, whether other holding companies start bidding for campus-marketing firms: Omnicom, Dentsu, and Interpublic all run sports divisions, and 130 Power Five schools still operate without dedicated brand consultancies.
Publicis wired the funds on January 17th. The first integration meeting happened two days later.